Publisher cancels horror novel's release over AI claims
Summary
Publisher cancels horror novel's release over AI claims 42 minutes ago Share Save Paul Glynn Culture reporter Share Save BBC Shy Girl was originally self-published in February 2025, then got a full UK release in November The US release of a horror novel has been cancelled by its publisher over concerns that AI was used to help write it. Shy Girl by US author Mia Ballard had been scheduled for publication in the US next month, but that will no longer go ahead, publisher Hachette said. Ballard, who sold almost 2,000 copies of the book in the UK, has denied using AI to write the book - telling the New York Times an acquaintance she hired to edit the original self-published version of the novel had used AI. "This controversy has changed my life in many ways and my mental health is at an all time low and my name is ruined for something I didn't even personally do," she said, noting she was pursuing legal action. The publisher said: "Hachette remains committed to protecting original creative expression and storytelling. "Orbit (in the US) will not publish Shy Girl, and Wildfire (in the UK) have decided to no longer continue publishing their edition," it added, referring to its imprints.
Publisher cancels horror novel's release over AI claims 42 minutes ago Share Save Paul Glynn Culture reporter Share Save BBC Shy Girl was originally self-published in February 2025, then got a full UK release in November The US release of a horror novel has been cancelled by its publisher over concerns that AI was used to help write it. Shy Girl by US author Mia Ballard had been scheduled for publication in the US next month, but that will no longer go ahead, publisher Hachette said. Ballard, who sold almost 2,000 copies of the book in the UK, has denied using AI to write the book - telling the New York Times an acquaintance she hired to edit the original self-published version of the novel had used AI. "This controversy has changed my life in many ways and my mental health is at an all time low and my name is ruined for something I didn't even personally do," she said, noting she was pursuing legal action. The publisher said: "Hachette remains committed to protecting original creative expression and storytelling. "Orbit (in the US) will not publish Shy Girl, and Wildfire (in the UK) have decided to no longer continue publishing their edition," it added, referring to its imprints.
## Article Content
Publisher cancels horror novel's release over AI claims
42 minutes ago
Share
Save
Paul Glynn
Culture reporter
Share
Save
BBC
Shy Girl was originally self-published in February 2025, then got a full UK release in November
The US release of a horror novel has been cancelled by its publisher over concerns that AI was used to help write it.
Shy Girl by US author Mia Ballard had been scheduled for publication in the US next month, but that will no longer go ahead, publisher Hachette said. The UK version, which was released in November, will also be discontinued.
A spokesperson for Hachette told BBC News the company "remains committed to protecting original creative expression and storytelling".
Ballard, who sold almost 2,000 copies of the book in the UK, has denied using AI to write the book - telling the New York Times an acquaintance she hired to edit the original self-published version of the novel had used AI.
"This controversy has changed my life in many ways and my mental health is at an all time low and my name is ruined for something I didn't even personally do," she said, noting she was pursuing legal action.
The New York Times,
which first reported the story
, said it "appears to be the first commercial novel from a major publishing house to be pulled over evidence of AI use".
The publisher said: "Hachette remains committed to protecting original creative expression and storytelling.
"Orbit (in the US) will not publish Shy Girl, and Wildfire (in the UK) have decided to no longer continue publishing their edition," it added, referring to its imprints.
Originally self-published last February, Shy Girl was described in its promotional material as a "buzzy BookTok sensation" and "a harrowing tale of survival and revenge" and well as being "bloody and unapologetic".
However, one reviewer on the GoodReads website claimed the book appeared to be "written by ChatGPT", while another noted the "bizarre formatting, typos and repetitive turns of phrase".
BBC News has approached Ballard for a further comment.
Is this product 'human-made'? The race to establish an AI-free logo
We would sell books by AI, says Waterstones boss
How an AI-written book shows why the tech 'terrifies' creatives
Author Philip Pullman calls on government to act over 'wicked' AI scraping
Literature
Artificial intelligence
Books
---
## Expert Analysis
### Merits
N/A
### Areas for Consideration
- Ballard, who sold almost 2,000 copies of the book in the UK, has denied using AI to write the book - telling the New York Times an acquaintance she hired to edit the original self-published version of the novel had used AI. "This controversy has changed my life in many ways and my mental health is at an all time low and my name is ruined for something I didn't even personally do," she said, noting she was pursuing legal action.
### Implications
- Shy Girl by US author Mia Ballard had been scheduled for publication in the US next month, but that will no longer go ahead, publisher Hachette said.
- The UK version, which was released in November, will also be discontinued.
- The publisher said: "Hachette remains committed to protecting original creative expression and storytelling. "Orbit (in the US) will not publish Shy Girl, and Wildfire (in the UK) have decided to no longer continue publishing their edition," it added, referring to its imprints.
### Expert Commentary
This article covers publisher, novel, shy topics. Areas of concern are also raised. Readability: Flesch-Kincaid grade 0.0. Word count: 386.
Related Articles
See the messages Brian Hooker sent his friend after wife's disappearance in...
3 days, 12 hours ago
Breaking down Artemis II's reentry process, heat shield's importance
3 days, 12 hours ago
Tracking traffic through the Strait of Hormuz
3 days, 12 hours ago
Israel issues new evacuation orders for Beirut suburbs
3 days, 12 hours ago